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Judit E. Š poner, 1 Ji ří Š poner 1 , Petr Stadlbauer 1 and Ernesto Di Mauro 2

The route from formamide to simple ribozymes – structures and mechanisms from advanced computational studies. Judit E. Š poner, 1 Ji ří Š poner 1 , Petr Stadlbauer 1 and Ernesto Di Mauro 2. in silico “cooking”. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations

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Judit E. Š poner, 1 Ji ří Š poner 1 , Petr Stadlbauer 1 and Ernesto Di Mauro 2

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  1. The route from formamide to simple ribozymes – structures and mechanisms from advanced computational studies Judit E. Šponer,1JiříŠponer1,Petr Stadlbauer1and Ernesto Di Mauro2

  2. in silico“cooking” Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations Force field based representation of the total energy. Information about the time-development of the structure and energy of the studied system. Quantum chemistry (QC) Solving the Schrödinger equation to get information about the structure, energy and electronic structure of the studied system. Commercially available softwares Aim: to supplement experiments

  3. Purine synthesis from formamide: Saladino, R.; Crestini, C.; Ciciriello, F.; Costanzo, G.; Di Mauro, E., Chem. Biodivers. 2007,4, 694-720.

  4. J. E. Sponer et al. J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116,720-726 bulk formamide bulk water gas-phase Free energy profile of the reaction route leading to the formation of the 6-membered heterocyclic ring. The energies were computed at B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) level. Bulk solvent effects were treated using the C-PCM approximation.

  5. J. E. Sponer et al. J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116,720-726 bulk formamide bulk water gas-phase Free energy profile for the dehydration step of the hexahydropyrimidine intermediate. The energies were computed at B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) level. Bulk solvent effects were treated using the C-PCM approximation. Numbers in parenthesis refer to the free energy changes calculated relative to the initial state complex formed from formamide dimer, HCN and water.

  6. J. E. Sponer et al. J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116,720-726 bulk formamide bulk water gas-phase Free energy profile for the formation of purines from the tetrahydro-pyrimidine precursor. The energies were computed at B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) level. Bulk solvent effects were treated using the C-PCM approximation. Numbers in parenthesis refer to the free energy changes calculated relative to the initial state complex formed from formamide dimer, HCN and water.

  7. New information inferred from computations ● In HCN-chemistry the synthetic routes leading to purines and pyrimidines are entirely different. In contrast, the formamide-based synthesis of purines may proceed via pyrimidine-intermediates, which enables the simultaneous production of purine and pyrimidine bases. ● Catalytic water molecules ● Catalysis by HCN

  8. Formamide-based synthesis of nucleobases in a high-energy impact event (i.e. meteoritic impact, simulated with a laser spark) Formamide is one of the most abundant molecules in the space. Simulation of meteoritic impact: irradiation with high-power laser → •CN radical. Formamide + •CN radical → nucleobases S. Civíš(Prague) M. Ferus (Prague)

  9. Vapor phase FTIR spectra of liquid formamide and its ice in the MIR and NIR spectral regions. A: irradiated formamide ice mixed with an FeNi meteorite B: non−irradiatedpureformamide ice C: gas phase pure formamide sample M. Ferus, S. Civiš, A. Mládek, J. Šponer, L. Juha, J. E. Šponer, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 20788−20796.

  10. Energy profile of the formation of 2,3-diaminomaleonitrile from the reaction of formamide with CN∙ radical computed at B3LYP/6−311++G(2d,2p) level. Grey curve: CCSD(T)/6−311++G(2d,2p) benchmark energy data using the B3LYP/6−311++G(2d,2p) optimized geometries . M. Ferus, S. Civiš, A. Mládek, J. Šponer, L. Juha, J. E. Šponer, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 20788−20796. Energy profile of the formation of 2,3-diaminomaleonitrile from the reaction of formamide with CN∙ radical. The individual reaction steps are highlighted with different colors on the curve computed at B3LYP/6−311++G(2d,2p) level. Grey curve: CCSD(T)/6−311++G(2d,2p) benchmark energy data using the B3LYP/6−311++G(2d,2p) optimized geometries .

  11. Vapor phase FTIR spectra of liquid formamide and its ice in the MIR and NIR spectral regions. A: irradiated formamide ice mixed with an FeNi meteorite B: non−irradiatedpureformamide ice C: gas phase pure formamide sample M. Ferus, S. Civiš, A. Mládek, J. Šponer, L. Juha, J. E. Šponer, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 20788−20796.

  12. Polymerization of 3’,5’-cGMP Selectively produces 3’,5’-linkages 3’,5’-cGMP: prebiotic building block, can be synthesized from formamide pH=9 OH- G. Costanzo, R. Saladino, G. Botta, A. Giorgi, A. Scipioni, S. Pino and E. Di Mauro, Chembiochem, 2012, 13, 999-1008.

  13. Mechanism of the polymerization of 3’,5’-cGMPs from quantum chemical calculations (TPSS-D2/TZVP level of theory)

  14. E, kcal/mol

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  18. E, kcal/mol

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  20. E, kcal/mol

  21. E, kcal/mol

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  23. E, kcal/mol

  24. The “Ligation following Intermolecular Cleavage” (LIC) mechanism C24G24 ligation C24 C24 C24 5’ 5’ 5’ 3’-OH 3’-OH P5’ P5’ 3’-OH 3’ 3’ G24 G24 G24 3’ P P P5’ + 5’P-G-3’OH cleavage C24G23 C24 + pG24 LIC terminal recombination C24G pG Tetraloops ? S. Pino, G. Costanzo, A. Giorgi, J. Šponer, J. E. Šponer and E. Di Mauro, Entropy, 2013, 15, 5362-5383.

  25. MD-simulations of tetraloop-like geometries enabling ligation and terminal cleavage Ligation Cleavage Ligation Cleavage

  26. MD-simulations of tetraloop-like geometries enabling terminal recombination

  27. Unifying concept for the origin of catalytically active oligonucleotides from 3’,5’ cGMP and 3’,5’ cAMP G. Costanzo, R. Saladino, G. Botta,A. Giorgi, A. Scipioni, S. Pino and E. Di Mauro, Chembiochem, 2012, 13, 999-1008. c-GMP polymerization ligation and catalysis cGMP 3’ 5’ C cGMP 3’ cGMP C cGMP cGMP 5’ A 3’ C cGMP cGMP 3’ C C A C C C C cGMP cGMP A C C G C S. Pino, G. Costanzo, A. Giorgi, J. Šponer, J. E. Šponer and E. Di Mauro, Entropy, 2013, 15, 5362-5383. cGMP cGMP G C A 3’ G C G C 5’ cGMP cGMP A C G C G 5’ cGMP A G C G C cGMP templated 3’ A C templated G C G S. Pino, G. Costanzo, A. Giorgi and E. Di Mauro, Biochemistry, 2011, 50, 2994-3003. 5’ cGMP 5’ 3’ 3’ 5’ 5’ 3’ A non-templated A A AMP stacking 3’ A AMP A C C A A C C A G C cAMP A C G cAMP 5’ S. Pino, F. Ciciriello, G. Costanzo and E. Di Mauro, J. Biol. Chem., 2008, 283, 36494-36503. G C A C G A 3’ 5’ A 5’

  28. Acknowledgement Prof. Ernesto Di Mauro, Rome, Italy Dr. Samanta Pino, Rome, Italy Dr. Alessandra Giorgi, Rome, Italy Dr. Giovanna Costanzo, Rome, Italy Dr. Martin Ferus, Prague, Czech RepublicProf. SvatoplukCivíš, Prague, Czech Republic Prof. JiříŠponer, Brno, Czech Republic Mr. Petr Stadlbauer, Brno, Czech Republic GAČR grant No. P208/12/1878

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